Ward v. Sampson

63 N.E.2d 751, 391 Ill. 585, 1945 Ill. LEXIS 394
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1945
DocketNo. 29111. Reversed and remanded.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 63 N.E.2d 751 (Ward v. Sampson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. Sampson, 63 N.E.2d 751, 391 Ill. 585, 1945 Ill. LEXIS 394 (Ill. 1945).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Fulton

delivered the opinion of the court:

Grafton Ward, appellee, filed a complaint in the nature of a bill for review, and the case comes directly to this court on appeal from a decree entered by the city court of the city of East St. Louis, on May 17, 1945. In that decree the court granted a motion for summary judgment on the part of the appellee herein. There was no testimony taken on the hearing, thé court entering its decree solely on the pleadings, affidavits, and counteraffidavits of the parties.

It appears from the record that on March 8, 1935, Lola B. Ward filed a bill for divorce against Grafton Ward in the city court of East St. Louis, in which she alleged that she and her husband were married on January 5, 1921, and that from that day until about March 6, 1935, lived and cohabited together as husband and wife. In the bill she charged her husband with adultery and with wilfully and maliciously threatening her life. In her bill she also charged that she and her husband were the owners of real estate described as “the.property located at 1711 Tudor Avenue, situated in the City of East St. Louis, County of St. Clair, and State of Illinois.” The bill for divorce prayed for the dissolution of the marriage and that the husband be ordered to pay such sum in the nature of alimony for her support and maintenance as the court should deem reasonable and just and that she have such other and further relief in the premises as equity may require and to the court should seem meet. Included also in the divorce bill was a prayer for an injunction restraining the husband from selling or disposing of any real or personal property and enjoining him from molesting or interfering with the wife in peacefully occupying the property at 1711 Tudor avenue or in any way doing bodily harm or injury to her. Grafton Ward, after first having obtained leave to answer as a poor person, filed an answer in the proceeding on March 19, 1935. In this answer he denied the charge of adultery and denied that he was guilty of extreme and repeated cruelty and asked that the temporary injunction be dissolved and requested a jury trial.

The divorce case was called for trial on December 19, 1935. The attorney for the defendant moved for a continuance which was denied by the court. The court in its decree states that the jury was .waived and the cause heard by the court on bill and answer. The court then found that the defendant had been guilty of wilful desertion without any reasonable cause for a space of more than one year immediately prior to the filing of the bill and entered an order granting the divorce. By this 1935 decree the court further decreed that the wife have certain personal property and that she have free and clear of any claim or interest of the defendant the following real estate: “Lots Twelve (12) and Eleven (11) of Block Two (2) of Dexter’s Third Addition of the City of East St. Louis, known as 1711 Tudor Avenue.” The defendant was ordered to convey any and all title he had in said real estate within 30 days and, in default thereof, the master in chancery was ordered to convey the title of the defendant to the complainant. No appeal or other proceedings were taken by Grafton Ward in connection with this decree until the filing of the bill in this proceeding.

Lola B. Ward continued to occupy the premises until her death on December 8, 1939. Since December 8, 1939, Cottrell Sampson, a son of Lola B. Ward by a former marriage, has occupied the premises in question.

The original complaint in the case at bar was filed on July 14, 1943, and personal service of summons secured on the defendant Cottrell Sampson. Later, Alvanette Sampson, a daughter of a deceased son of Lola B. Ward, entered her appearance in the proceeding. No pleading was filed to the original complaint, but approximately a year later, on June 26, 1944, Grafton Ward filed a second amended complaint to which he attached, as exhibits, copies of the 1935 bill for divorce and the decree therein.

In his second amended complaint, Ward alleged that he and his former wife, Lola B. Ward, became the owners in joint tenancy of the “N.W. Óne-half (J/2) oí Lot Eleven (n) in Block Two (2) of Dexter’s Third Addition to the City of East St. Louis and Lot Twelve (12) in Block Two (2) in the same addition;” that after purchasing the above property he made valuable improvements thereon and that he and his former wife for a number of years occupied it as their residence; that he paid the entire consideration and that title was placed to the premises in joint' tenancy for the reason that he and his wife had no children and in case of the death of himself it was intended that the wife should have the premises and in case of the death of the wife it was intended that he, the husband, should have the premises; that no amended complaint was ever filed in the divorce action begun by his wife; that in the divorce action the wife did not ask the court to decree or award to her any of his right, title or interest iri the above-described premises; that the only relief prayed for by the wife was an injunction against him from encumbering, selling or otherwise disposing of his real or personal estate and that no other or further relief was prayed concerning the real estate; that thereafter the divorce .action was heard without any amendments or changes and that said Lola Ward did not offer any testimony of desertion, which was not charged in the complaint or any amendment thereto, and that on December 19, 1935, the city court of East St. Louis pretended to have granted a decree of divorce on the grounds of wilful desertion without any charge of desertion in said complaint against- him. The plaintiff in his second amended complaint further alleged that in its former decree the city court of East St. Louis had pretended to order the defendant in said cause, who is the plaintiff here, to convey all title to all of lots 11 and 12 in block 2 of Dexter’s Third Addition to the city of East St. Louis; that there was no prayer in the complaint asking the court to enter such an order and no showing that the defendant in the former cause was the owner or had any interest in lots 11 and 12 aforesaid; that-because the decree does not conform to either the allegations or the proof, the court was without jurisdiction to enter the order requiring the defendant .to make the above-described conveyance; that he had no knowledge or notice of the provisions contained in the former decree with reference to the transfer of his interest in the real estate and that at the time of the death of Lola B. Ward the title to the premises in question here stood in the name of the plaintiff here and Lola B. Ward as joint tenants and that the defendant herein, Cottrell Sampson, has no interest in and to the premises.

In the second amended complaint Ward also alleges an agreement between himself and Lola B. Ward, at the time of the filing of the complaint for divorce and at all times subsequent thereto, that the title should remain in joint tenancy and that Lola B. Ward should occupy the premises as her home and place of residence as long as she lived and that the plaintiff herein was to pay the taxes thereon; that in pursuance of such understanding and agreement, Lola B. Ward did continue to remain in occupancy until her death and that the- plaintiff herein paid the taxes.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.E.2d 751, 391 Ill. 585, 1945 Ill. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-sampson-ill-1945.